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Dallas
College
Opening
Address
by
Ra’is Abu Bakr Rieger
Cape Town, 21 February 2005
It
is a great honour for me to say a few words today about the meaning
and importance of this College. While reflecting on the essence
of Islamic upbringing and education, I found a highly insightful
indication from Johann Wolfgang Goethe, the German poet-prince of
the 18th century. Goethe recognised the simple yet timeless core
of every genuine Islamic teaching: the acceptance of the destiny
and the doctrine of Unity.
An enraptured Goethe described this all-encompassing teaching in
his conversations with his friend, the poet Eckermann:
“...What is remarkable are the teachings with which the Mohammedans
begin their education. As the foundation of their religion, they
establish in their youth the conviction that man cannot encounter
anything but what an all-guiding Divinity has long ago decreed;
this equips and reassures them for their entire lives, and leaves
them needing little else.”
Goethe immediately recognised this simple yet foundational insight
within his own cultural sphere, and attempted to convey it in the
famous analogy of the soldier:
”... there is basically some of this belief in each and every
one of us, without us having been taught it. “The bullet that
does not have my name on it will not hit me,” says the soldier
in the battle. And how should he keep up his courage and spirits
under extreme danger without such confidence? ...[It is] a doctrine
of a Providence which remains aware of the smallest detail, and
without whose will and permission nothing can occur.”
Goethe then admires the dynamism and depth of Islamic thinking:
”The Mohammedans thereupon begin their teaching of philosophy
with the doctrine that nothing exists about which you cannot say
the opposite. They exercise the minds of their youth by having them
find and articulate the contrary opinion of every proposition, which
inescapably leads to great skill in thought and speech. Then, once
the opposite has been claimed about every proposition, the doubt
arises as to which is actually true. But they do not remain in the
doubt. Rather, it drives the intellect to examine more closely and
to ascertain; and, if performed correctly, from there derives that
certainty which is the goal in which man finds complete reassurance.
You can see that this teaching is lacking nothing, and that for
all our systems we are no further on, and that absolutely nobody
can get anywhere with them.”
Goethe concludes with the insight that only in the encounter with
Islam can a person achieve true recognition of the spiritual level
he himself has achieved. He says:
”This philosophical system of the Mohammedans is a wonderful
yardstick which one can apply to oneself and others in order to
determine one’s actual spiritual level."
(11 April 1827 J.P. Eckermann: Conversations with Goethe during
the last years of his life)
*
* * * *
Today
– almost two hundred years after Goethe – we in Germany
are discussing a new word, ‘Bildungsnotstand’, which
means the ‘crisis of education’. At the beginning of
this year, which has been declared ‘Schiller Year’,
the German director Andrea Breth fiercely criticised German theatres
and their treatment of the classics.
“We can no longer say that we are the Nation of Poets and
Thinkers,” declared Breth, director of Vienna’s Burgtheater,
in the weekly newspaper Die Zeit. “With the cuts taking place
in the theatres today, it will no longer be possible to stage many
of the great literary works,” she said. “Either the
theatres themselves will disappear, or the ensembles needed to perform
such works will no longer exist.” Today’s theatre, she
claims, is a “Supermarket of sweets without any aim.”
Breth also doubts the modern public’s ability to grasp Schiller
at all. “With the increasing trivialisation of society, one
asks oneself whether Schiller can still be done at all, whether
anyone still understands him. If you no longer know why you exist
– when people deny that we have anything to bequeath –
then things become difficult.”
One might add that in that state – that is, without knowledge
of the classics – an in-depth discussion of the nature of
terrorism, in the light of such works as Schiller’s famous
classic William Tell, becomes impossible. What is being expressed
today is the growing European scepticism which doubts that modern
man’s spiritual standing is evolving in line with the apparent
technical progress. The German philosopher Martin Heidegger even
announced the end of the Age of Education in Europe – in other
words the end of any possibility of education – since in the
economically defined form of man, only an isolated stock of human
capital remains. Knowledge is reduced to the endlessly growing stock
of information.
According to Heidegger, not only education but also science has
become ‘groundless’, and therefore lacks deeper meaning.
This thesis can be easily appraised today by asking a medic about
the nature of health, an economist about the nature of wealth, or
a jurist about the nature of justice. A substantial answer is unlikely.
For all our scientific progress, scientific knowledge is losing
meaning.
*
* * * *
This
College, whose opening we witness today, bears the name ‘Dallas
College’, a name which can be considered a symbol of a fateful
confluence. The College is the centre-point of various axes that
meet; it is both a beginning and an end. On one side of the line
are the European sciences and philosophy, and on the other side
the Islamic Revelation and Law. They have been brought together
in one spiritual event by the founder of this College whose family
name it also bears: Shaykh Dr. Abdalqadir as-Sufi. Both lines of
knowledge meet in this College in South Africa, and in doing so
form a completely new spiritual and intellectual location.
The College deals primarily with the following fields:
Language
Geopolitics
Technology
Law – that is, Fiqh
This
means it involves ‘being-in-the-world’ in the broadest
sense, meaning the understanding of the event of the creation itself
in which we are taking part. Our young men and women will be studying
in the midst of this dynamic South African community, and in doing
so will take to heart the Hadith of the Prophet recorded in the
Sahih Collection of Tirmidhi: “Muhammad, sallallahu alayhi
wa sallam, said, ‘A man is on the same Deen as his companion
– so each of you should look to whom he takes as companions.’”
Islam has universal knowledge, but it needs the right location in
order to revive that unity of knowledge and action of the Ancient
Greeks. Only then can the World-State-nihilism be overcome which
the German constitutional legalist Carl Schmitt so appropriately
defined as “the separation of order and location”. Today,
Africa is the place which casts most dramatically a global suspicion
on the supposedly successful model of ‘Democracy and Capitalism’.
Quite aside from all the debt-traps, from the IMF and WTO, here
one can study what happens when the capitalism which economically
englobes ‘democracy’ so penetrates all of its political
institutions, that the political form which is meant to be its own
no longer finds any democratic mechanism by which to correct it.
This situation is currently the fate of the whole world.
In Europe this situation is being analysed by thinkers who are exiled
from both the public and the institutions of learning. Cape Town,
therefore, has become an asylum for this knowledge. It should not
be forgotten that many European thinkers are no longer taught at
European universities. Many current contributions are banned from
the public eye. In this sense democracy applies the medieval technique
of exile which Tocqueville described in 1840 in his book ‘Democracy
in America’:
“The ruler no longer says: Think as I do or die; he says:
“You have the freedom not to think as I do. Your life, fortune
and everything will be granted to you. But from that day on you
will be an alien among us.”
Surely the most radical analysis of the human being’s current
situation is to be found in the scandalously received books of Giorgio
Agamben and Jean-Christophe Rufin. If one reads these two works
together with ‘Technique of the Coup de Banque’ by Shaykh
Dr. Abdalqadir as-Sufi, a complete picture of the here-and-now opens
up. All three thinkers attempt to penetrate the nature and the facade
of modernity.
Giorgio Agamben shocked the West with his basic thesis. According
to him there is an “innermost solidarity” between democracy
and totalitarianism. Naziism and fascism remain “threateningly
topical”, and democracy is “in the throes of collapse”.
Agamben considers the Camp, a location without order, as an integral
part of the new reality of the World State.
Since Guantanamo, we Muslims know that this reality certainly carries
fascistic traits. Anyone who doubts this would do well to recall
the following historical discussion between Prosecutor Jackson and
the great Nazi Göring shortly after the World War Two in Nuremberg:
Prosecutor Jackson: “‘Schutzhaft’ means that you
also took people into custody who had not yet committed any crime,
but who you believed had the potential to commit a crime?”
Göring: “Precisely. We arrested people who had not yet
committed a crime, but of whom we could expect crime had they remained
free. The original purpose for which the Camps were established
was to accommodate existing enemies of the State whom we viewed
as such, and rightly so.”
(Nuremberg Trials, 18.3.1946)
The Camp remains a symbol of injustice to this day. Inspired by
Schmitt, Agamben uncovers the ‘State of Emergency’,
that relapse into a state outside of applicable law, as the hidden
foundation of the present day. He traces the tradition right back
into the American history of the 19th century. But, says Agamben,
“The state of emergency did not reach its greatest extent
until today.” He explains that in the ‘War’ against
terror, the crisis which is the foundation of the state of emergency
has become the norm.
The ongoing crisis, and the necessity for total security, facilitates
that old authoritarian impulse fundamental to State thinking since
Hobbes’ Leviathan: order and obedience. The State provides
security and receives the obedience of its subjects. Giorgio Agamben
draws parallels all the way down to the present day. “In all
Western democracies,” he says in his key statement, “the
declaration of the state of emergency is replaced by an unequalled
expansion of the security paradigm as a normal technique of rule”
– and that with almost daily refinements of its Special Powers.
The terrorist of Arab descent has, according to Agamben, been the
first to enable the ‘Israelisation’ of world politics.
Jean-Christophe Rufin, doctor, political scientist and member of
the organisation ‘Médecins sans frontiers’, does
away with another myth. In Rufin’s view, democracy is stronger
than dictatorship: “Liberal democracy,” he writes, “does
however love the morbid idea that it is doomed to destruction.”
Rufin’s words about this weakness of democracy may appear
contrived, but they are meant with all seriousness. By them he characterises
democracy’s almost unlimited capacity to assimilate resistances
and put up with or even encourage radical opposition. It acquires
its political strength through the existence of an enemy. In Europe,
this absolute integrative power of the democracies has now led to
the States becoming increasingly involved in the education and ‘cultivation’
of the Muslims. This state of affairs is of course provoked all
the more by the recognition that only the Revelation escapes total
integration.
In his brilliant book ‘La Dictature libéral’,
Jean-Christophe Rufin describes the new “invisible political
hand” that ensures the separation of society and system.
“In contrast, the liberal culture succeeds in making a strict
separation between system and society. This system, with its economic
and political mechanisms, must interfere as little as possible in
the social events and human activities, while these activities,
on the other hand, however free they may be, must not endanger the
apparatus that enables them to take place.”
The system, Rufin goes on to explain, is characterised by a cold,
double indifference to the human being:
“In a certain sense the democratic culture is founded on a
dual indifference. The first indifference is that of the liberal
system for the human beings that belong to it. The system, especially
in its economic aspect, is becoming more and more inter-national
and supra-national, and is therefore ever more difficult to control.
The human beings, in contrast, can only express their political
choice on a national or local level – that is, without reaching
the actual sources of the system’s power. This split between
the national realm – which, like it or not, remains the zone
in which democratic control is exercised – and the supra-national
realm in which the really important decisions are made, is one of
the causes of the autonomy of the liberal culture. It has several
advantages. For example, it allows the economic system to escape
democratic control. It also allows political protest to be kept
within limits, by restricting it to the national sphere.”
The fact that States and systems are like machines has long been
recognised. Ernst Jünger fittingly defined the new global type
of human being as the ‘Worker’, who appears across the
world in the clothing of technology. Carl Schmitt indicated that
the system neutralises every political impulse or thought –
in fact it depoliticises it. How far is modern life thus removed
from the Goethean recognition that nature itself is not a system!
And how far our systems are from the ancient platonic idea of a
society in the image of the Big Man!
*
* * * *
One
of the weaknesses of the recent Western analyses from Heidegger
to Rufin is that despite the obvious urgency of the situation, they
fail to define any guidelines for action. Asked about the possibility
of action, a concerned Heidegger proclaimed in an interview with
Der Spiegel: “Only a god can save us!”
It is here that the masterwork of Shaykh Dr. Abdalqadir, ‘Technique
of the Coup de Banque’, comes into its own. The book adds
to the numerous modern analyses by clearly and boldly naming the
‘invisible hand’ in European history: the Banking Elite.
The book completes the story of the much-vaunted Enlightenment by
a portrait of the power-games of the financial elite. As in Aristotle
but in the modern context, the ‘princip contra naturum’,
usury, is openly described in its effects and consequences. After
reading this book, the thinking man becomes open to the Qur’anic
categorical imperative on the Muslims: Trade is permitted –
usury forbidden. The guideline has been found, the lost unity of
knowledge and action once again made possible. The European question
of how to limit unbridled capitalism is revealed in Islamic Law,
since only there is the endless increasing of capital forbidden.
In this place – and here we have Shaykh Dr. Abdalqadir as-Sufi
to thank – the transmission of knowledge will once again become
possible. With the help of the Qur’an and the Sunna, the zone
of action of this College and its areas of study in this moment
in history can be illuminated:
- In the field of language we move within the contrast between language
as Revelation and language as excessive information on the internet.
- In the field of geopolitics we move within the contrast between
World Statism and the possibility of order and location.
- In the field of law we move within the contrast between genocidal
oligarchies and a just nomos for the Earth.
It is in the field of technology in particular that we confront
modern nihilism, which Heidegger described as “a confrontational
challenge to the creation”. Of course, this College will also
teach all the modern methods of information technology, but in a
way which Heidegger defined as “composed”. Only with
inner and outer laws can man escape the modern law of technology,
a law which Heidegger expressed as follows: “Man believes
he has technology in his hands, while in reality it is the other
way around.” In other words – in our words as Muslims
– man is either a slave of Allah or a slave of the technical
project.
This attitude of “Yes” and “No” towards
technology is portrayed by Heidegger in his book Gelassenheit, a
book which moves unusually clearly towards the Sufic outlook on
life. In it he says:
“We can say yes to the inevitable use of technical objects,
and we can say no at the same time, in that we refuse to allow them
exclusively to make demands on us, and thus bend, confuse and finally
make barren our innermost nature.”
Heidegger was asked thereupon, if we are to simultaneously say “Yes”
and “No” to the technical objects in this manner, will
not our relationship to the technical world become ambiguous and
unsure? Heidegger answered as follows – and here his viewpoint
peaks in a Sufic confirmation of our relationship to the “Dunya”
:
“Quite the opposite. Our relationship to the technical world
becomes simple and calm in a most wonderful way. We allow the technical
objects into our daily life, yet we leave them out of it at the
same time. That means we leave them to be as things; not as something
absolute, rather as entities reliant on something Higher. I would
like to describe this attitude of a simultaneous Yes and No to the
technical world by means of an old word: ‘Composure, in regard
to things’.”
The overcoming of the dominance of technology is undoubtedly an
inner and an outer project. Every Muslim has the knowledge to undertake
it. It requires that we remember Allah and establish a just economic
order. It is also doubtless the project of all of the authentic
Tariqas and their traditional, living knowledge which peaks in the
creative insight that man already knows everything, but that he
must remember it.
Even the German founder of the kindergarten, Friedrich Fröbel,
was aware of this foundational principle of every education. He
taught that “Education means having to bring something out
of man, not put something in.”
It is one of the basic principles of our world-view to see people,
and especially young people, as our true capital. Above all else,
Islam and its great communities bring about People. In this, every
Muslim is a knower. Foucault was of course absolutely right when
he saw the end of every society and every politique in the establishment
of christian, pastoral power. In the secular State this depoliticising
function continued with the idea of representation, in the end resulting
in the consumer, devoid of meaning and offering up his affairs.
Our political thinking is the old platonic concept of the Political
embodied in the image of the weaver. The process of weaving does
not separate, it joins, reconciles opposites, founds societies,
brings about unity, thus revealing in the pattern of the cloth the
invisible Hand of Allah ta’ala. So it is that the graduates
of this College will not represent – they will weave.
The College, therefore, prepares the last stages of education. “Education,”
Mark Twain once said, “is what’s left over when the
last dollar is gone.”
I wish the teachers and the students and the community in Cape Town
every conceivable success. As Allah says in Ayat 282 of Surat al-Baqara:
“Have taqwa of Allah and Allah will give you knowledge. Allah
has knowledge of all things.”
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